One local man is seen trying to shield the Kashmiris and pleading with the menacing crowd not to harm them. However, his plea was met with further fury from the assailants
Team Clarion
NEW DELHI – Members of a Hindutva outfit attacked several Kashmiri shop owners and vandalised their merchandise at the Geeta Jayanti Mela in Haryana’s Kurukshetra.
The assailants, waving saffron flags, exhorted people not to buy from Muslim vendors. They then proceeded to throw the merchandise onto the street and targeted the vendors. The situation could have escalated further, but local residents quickly intervened, coming to the rescue of the shop owners and preventing the attackers from causing more harm.
The incident took place on Saturday (December 7) and it highlights growing intolerance towards minorities in the country. It has ignited significant outrage after the video of the attack circulated widely on social media.
The video shows a group of people wearing saffron serves and waving large saffron flags as they marched past the shops, using loudspeakers to announce that attendees should refrain from purchasing items from Muslim sellers.
One member of the Hindutva group was recorded using derogatory remarks, stating “These Muslims steal your daughters,” and accused the Kashmiri sellers of being “Bangladeshis”.
One local man is seen trying to shield the Kashmiri sellers and pleads with the menacing crowd not to harm them. However, his plea was met with further fury from the assailants, who continued to shout inflammatory remarks.
Saturday’s incident marks the second assault on Kashmiri sellers within a month. Earlier, two Kashmiri traders were harassed in Himachal Pradesh’s Hamirpur district by a local woman claiming to be the wife of the village sarpanch.
A video of this incident shows the woman threatening the traders to either leave Himachal Pradesh or chant “Jai Shri Ram”, a Hindu religious chant. “We are Hindus and we have our Hindu community selling the same things. Why would Muslims come from somewhere else and do business here?” she is heard saying. She also urged villagers behind the camera to boycott businesses from Kashmir.
Such attacks reflect a troubling trend of right-wing extremism targeting minorities, especially Muslims. These consecutive incidents have raised concerns about communal harmony and safety for vulnerable communities in India.